How Lab-Grown Steak Could Save the World

It's gross, bizarre, and completely unnatural — but the future of humanity might depend on "vegetarian meat" from test tubes

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The British are furious that cloned beef and milk may have entered their food supply, and a hundred copies of the original cow might be next. Fifty-eight percent of Europeans wouldn't (knowingly) devour cloned animals — and half of Americans are uncomfortable with the idea — but the omnivorous future holds an even more technologically advanced possibility: in vitro meat. No animal is killed; the flesh is lab-grown. (An early supporter of the concept? Winston Churchill.)

ESQUIRE:Why eat lab-grown meat when we can have delicious cloned meat like they do in England?

DR. MORRIS BENJAMINSON: Cloned meat is bound to be unsafe because of genetic degradation — at least so far. We learned that with Dolly the sheep. Lab-grown meat is different in terms of safety; it's merely tissue that's been removed from the body of a living animal and maintained outside of that body. It doesn't require genetic manipulation, merely nutrients and stimuli so the meat will remain viable and increase in mass. And the whole point of growing meat in test tubes is the philosophy of surveillance, so there won't be viruses or disease-causing entities. If small tumors start to arise, somebody would see it and get rid of that particular culture.

ESQ:There won't be methane emissions without a digestive tract. Could this technology stop global warming?

MB: Reports have definitively shown that animal husbandry produces massive pollution, and a large percentage of our problems are caused by raising large numbers of animals for slaughter. Look at the way chickens are raised. Fish raised in captivity produce enormous quantities of waste, and there's no good way to dispose of it. The environment is not being affected favorably; from the standpoint of preserving the environment, lab-grown meat technology certainly deserves support. And beyond climate change, this could stop famines in places like Ethiopia and Darfur, where people starve to death because they don't have enough protein in their diet.

ESQ:So how long before we can buy this in the supermarket?

MB: I wouldn't have proposed the research to NASA if I hadn't thought there would be commercialization of the technology because the funding came from the Small Business Innovative Research Act. Timing depends on a lot of factors, and it's hard to say when this will come to fruition. Each meat has unique problems and requirements; I concentrated on fish, the Dutch are working on pork, and other people have made some attempts at beef.

If the U.S. government put more money into this work, it would proceed more quickly. My goal was to feed astronauts on the long voyage to Mars — it could also be used on submarines — but NASA decided not to go to Mars yet, so now I'm starting a nonprofit; we'll raise money on the Internet. Venture capital is not going to do that because they don't invest in preliminary research. The Dutch government is putting a significant amount of money into it, but the level of public funding in America just isn't sufficient. PETA offered a million dollars to anyone who can bring it to market, but that was ridiculous because you would need the million dollars to even start the research.

ESQ:Nobody is going to pay $45,000 for a hamburger though.

MB: First comes government funding, then comes private industry — and private industry caters to the market. People are already paying more for organic meat because they think it's healthier and safer; if it's proven that test tube meat is healthier and safer, people will pay more for it. Not everybody, because some religions consider meat barbaric no matter where it comes from, but a given percentage of the population. People won't give up hunting though; the NRA will still be shooting at turkeys and deer and quail, not clay pigeons.

ESQ:And we could eat any kind of animal without guilt? How would Rover and Whiskers taste?

MB: I personally would not feel right about eating dog or cat, but Lewis and Clark ate dog so it's not un-American. Just to be clear, though, I am not a vegetarian — I like to eat meat.